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BIODIVERSITY: STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION – Vol. I - Biodiversity and Ecosystem Functioning: Basic Principles - M. Scherer-Lorenzen BIODIVERSITY AND ECOSYSTEM FUNCTIONING: BASIC PRINCIPLES M. Scherer-Lorenzen Institute of Plant Sciences, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETH), Switzerland Keywords: biodiversity, conservation, ecosystem functioning, ecosystem management, ecosystem processes, experimental studies, functional traits, functional groups, niche differentiation, observational studies, resource use complementarity, sampling, species richness, stability. Contents 1. Introduction 2. A historical perspective 3. A new paradigm in ecology: the ‘Biodiversity-Ecosystem Function Paradigm’ 3.1. Hypotheses 3.2. Approaches 3.3. Mechanisms 3.3.1. Niche complementarity 3.3.2. Facilitation and mutualism 3.3.3. Sampling or selection effects 3.3.4. Distinguishing between complementarity and sampling 3.3.5. Trait differences are responsible 4. Combining old and new concepts 5. Biodiversity and stability 6. Implications for ecosystem management and conservation Glossary Bibliography Biographical Sketch Summary Since the mid 1990s, ecologists have intensified their efforts to describe and quantify UNESCO – EOLSS the effects that biodiversity can exert on the various processes within ecosystems. Both theoretical and experimental work has shown that within a habitat, changing diversity has profound effects on biomass production, nutrient retention, and other ecosystem SAMPLE CHAPTERS characteristics such as stability. In most experiments, a positive relationship between plant diversity and productivity has been found, while the level of unconsumed resources was inversely related to diversity. The diversity of functional groups in general had more pronounced effects than the number of species, emphasizing the importance of functional traits of species. As underlying mechanisms, niche differentiation leading to complementary resource use, facilitative interactions among species, and probabilistic sampling effects have been identified. For management or conservation purposes, it is crucial to distinguish results obtained from within-habitat manipulative experiments, from those of observational studies comparing across-habitat patterns of diversity and ecosystem functioning. As the understanding of the ©Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (EOLSS) BIODIVERSITY: STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION – Vol. I - Biodiversity and Ecosystem Functioning: Basic Principles - M. Scherer-Lorenzen biodiversity-ecosystem functioning relationship progresses, conservation and management will more and more benefit from these basic insights into how communities and ecosystems function. 1. Introduction ‘Does biodiversity matter for the functioning of ecosystems?’ or ‘Does it make any difference to the processes within an ecosystem if there are many or only a few species?’ These are the central questions that arise when one is looking at the many ecosystems on earth differing very much in their biological richness, but which all have a similar basic set of energy-, matter-, and information-fluxes. For example, both tropical forests with their overwhelming richness in flora and fauna, and extremely species-poor systems such as lichen communities in Antarctica, fix carbon through photosynthesis of the plant compartment, and organic matter is decomposed by microorganisms into mineral components, which are partly taken up by the primary producers again. Although admittedly simple, this example shows that processes central for the functioning of ecosystems might be maintained by many or very few organisms, which suggests the question whether there is any relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. The answer to this question is not only of pure academic interest, but it becomes more and more relevant as the loss of biodiversity is dramatic and globally accelerating. From a human point of view, the key question may thus be formulated: ‘Does biodiversity matter for the provision of ecosystem services?’, which are the benefits people obtain from ecosystems. This contribution focuses on the relationship between biological diversity and two aspects of ecosystem functioning: resource dynamics at a given point in time such as primary production or nutrient cycling, and long-term stability in the face of environmental change. The anthropocentric ‘value’ of biodiversity and its importance for the ecosystem services that humanity obtain are dealt with in The Value of Biodiversity and is in the focus of another large international initiative, the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MA 2003, www.millenniumassessment.org). 2. A historical perspective It was not until the beginning of the 1990s that, alarmed by the increasing loss of biodiversity, scientists started to systematically seek answers to the basic question UNESCO – EOLSS outlined above. Before that time, a related topic was discussed mainly from a theoretical perspective: the relation between diversity and stability of food webs. While early SAMPLE CHAPTERS theory predicted more stable properties in more complex food webs of producers and consumers, later models predicted less stable population dynamics (see also section 5). Therefore, the notion that diversity may influence ecosystem processes in a ‘positive’ way was not apposite. In addition, research from agronomy demonstrated that mixtures of crop species were often less productive than the best monoculture. Experience from agriculture also showed that in the course of intensification of production, productivity increased through higher input of fertilizers and pesticides, while diversity within fields decreased. However, the ‘biodiversity crisis’ again raised interest in the question whether diversity ©Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (EOLSS) BIODIVERSITY: STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION – Vol. I - Biodiversity and Ecosystem Functioning: Basic Principles - M. Scherer-Lorenzen has effects on ecosystem functioning or not. The launch of the Scientific Committee of Problems of the Environment (SCOPE) program of 1991 entitled ‘Ecosystem Functioning of Biodiversity’, initiated the recent rapid development in this field of research. This program helped to bridge the gap between two disciplines in ecology that had followed separate ways in studying ecosystems, namely ‘population or community ecology’ and ‘ecosystem ecology’. The former discipline accumulated knowledge on the distribution and abundance of species as a function of abiotic (physical and chemical) and biotic (interactions among species such as competition) conditions. The latter discipline has studied the flow of energy and the fluxes and pools of elements within ecosystems, without explicitly considering the diversity of organisms involved and their functional roles. In the first product of that SCOPE program, a hypothesis- based and comprehensive framework on how biodiversity may affect ecosystem processes was expressed for the first time (see Schulze & Mooney 1993, section 3). In the second half of the SCOPE program, an in-depth exploration of the functional role of biodiversity in various biomes was published in three books (Mooney et al 1996, Solbrig et al 1996, Orians et al 1996). This effort was largely based on the evaluation of observational studies comparing communities with different levels of diversity, e.g. species poor temperate forests of mid-Europe with species rich ones of East Asia. Quickly it became obvious that such correlational studies could hardly detect any causal mechanisms of biodiversity effects due to co-varying factors (see section 3.2. for more details) and that they have to be complemented by experimental approaches. Parts of that program were then included into the Global Biodiversity Assessment (GBA; Heywood & Watson 1995), an independent, peer-reviewed analysis of the biological and social aspects of biodiversity, commissioned by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). This assessment was done to fulfill the need of a comprehensive review of current knowledge in the framework of the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). Based on the insight gained from correlational studies and on the formulation of the early hypotheses, a first generation of experiments were conducted that sought to reject the null hypothesis of no relationship between biodiversity as an independent variable and ecosystem functioning as the dependent variable (see examples listed in the bibliography). All those experiments adopted a basic common design: establishment of a gradient in biodiversity (most often plant species richness or the number of functional groups), while keeping extrinsic conditions (e.g. climate, fertility, land use history) as UNESCO – EOLSS constant as possible. They were conducted in microbial microcosms, in controlled environmental facilities, or in the field. A variety of ecosystem processes were SAMPLE CHAPTERS monitored as response variables, with a focus on biomass production (primary productivity). For very practical reasons, these experiments used fast-growing, small sized, mainly early successional model systems such as grasslands. In essence, most studies reported a positive, but asymptotic relationship between diversity and ecosystem processes, wherein the loss of species from an ecosystem initially has only a weak effect, but which accelerates as the system impoverishes. More diverse systems consistently had higher biomass production, higher nutrient uptake and consequently lower leaching losses to the groundwater, and they were more resistant against invasion by other species (see Biodiversity and Ecosystem Functioning: Experimental Systems). More recently, experimental work on the biodiversity–ecosystem functioning ©Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (EOLSS) BIODIVERSITY: STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION – Vol. I - Biodiversity and Ecosystem Functioning: Basic Principles - M. Scherer-Lorenzen relationship increased strongly in number and many different ecosystem types such as wetlands, marine systems or forests were tackled. In addition, more mechanistically driven experiments were initiated, focusing on nutrient dynamics, trophic interactions, population dynamics or below/above-ground interactions, for instance. Parallel to the empirical work, theoretical studies began to explore the functional significance of diversity, building upon concepts of intercropping theory from agriculture and upon models of resource competition and niche differentiation. These experiments have spurred a tremendous controversy among ecologists about the importance of biodiversity for ecosystem functioning. The debate focused on the validity of the experimental designs, on the relevance of several distinct mechanisms responsible for the observed diversity effects (see section 3.3.), and on the relevance of the findings for interpreting biodiversity loss in natural ecosystems. In part, this controversy arose from the apparent discrepancy between the results obtained from the artificially assembled model communities and observational studies (for details see sections 3.2. and 4., and also The Role of Above- and Below-ground Linkages in Ecosystem Functioning. After almost a decade of intensive research, two conferences held in 1999 and 2000 under the auspices of the International Geosphere-Biosphere Program – Global Change and Terrestrial Ecosystems (IGBP-GCTE) and the international program of biodiversity science DIVERSITAS summarized and synthesized the empirical findings and theoretical concepts. The resulting books are another two landmarks in the fast-growing area of research addressing biodiversity and ecosystem functioning (Kinzig et al. 2002; Loreau et al. 2002), providing both thorough reviews of all relevant studies and perspectives and challenges for future work. A recent article by Hooper and colleagues summarizes these issues too (Hooper et al. 2005). Recently, a synthesis book explicitly focused on the role of insects for ecosystem functioning (Weisser and Siemann 2004), whereas another one extended the biodiversity-ecosystem functioning issue to the temperate and boreal forest realm (Scherer-Lorenzen et al 2005). Interestingly, the first ecological experiment documented that was analyzed by Darwin and mentioned in On the Origin of Species (1872, p. 113) had a similar aim as the manipulative biodiversity experiments of the last decade: to determine which species growing in monoculture or in mixtures make the most productive grasslands on different soil types. From that experiment Darwin concluded that mixtures of several UNESCO – EOLSS distinct plant genera produce higher yields than species grown in monocultures, which essentially was endorsed by the modern experiments. SAMPLE CHAPTERS 3. A new paradigm in ecology: the ‘Biodiversity-Ecosystem Function Paradigm’ The recent advances made in functional biodiversity research led to a new synthetic ecological framework, which has even been denoted as a new paradigm of ecology. While biodiversity has historically been seen as a response variable that is affected by climate, nutrient availability and disturbance, this new emerging paradigm, called ‘Biodiversity-Ecosystem Function Paradigm’ (Naeem 2002), sees the environment primarily as a function of diversity, underlining the active role of the biota in governing environmental conditions. It does not deny, of course, the influence of the environment ©Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (EOLSS)
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